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Loading... Alive (original 1974; edition 2005)by Piers Paul Read
Work detailsAlive: The Story of the Andes Survivors by Piers Paul Read (1974)
on Saturday, September 17, 2005 I wrote about this book (not much alas) wow this book was great. I've read it in 1 day, could not stop reading. shed some tears to and I think they are all hero's Powerful, overwhelming, frightening, and uplifting all at the same time. A testament to the courage to survive. Oddly perhaps, I find this an uplifting story. Yes, people died, and other people had very hard choices to make about how they were willing to survive. But they did survive, and two men hiked across the Andes to try to get help - when they didn't have any gear or training to do so. It's an amazing story. no reviews | add a review
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That describes gruesome suffering, but somehow this account managed to be life-affirming. Maybe because, after all, this wasn't some random group of passengers. The plane was taking a team of Uruguay rugby players, their family and friends to an exhibition game in Chili. So teamwork, friendship, faith, courage--all are an important part of this story. To allow themselves to eat the body of their dead, some clung to their faith, even trying to see their taking nourishment from them as a form of communion--as a choice to live. Read writes with a restraint and sensitivity that doesn't allow you to read this and feel anything but admiration for the survivors.
I was reminded of this book because I just read the account of Nando Parrado, one of the survivors, in Miracle in the Andes. It's a moving story in its own right--Parrado was one of the two men who climbed a mountain to bring help back. But even in the mind of Parrado and his co-author, it's Alive that was their touchstone. Parrado called Alive a "magnificent book" and said he had not tried to tell his own story for 30 years because he felt that book already covered "all the public needed to know." Rause, his co-author, in his acknowledgments admitted wondering if another book was necessary since Alive "told that story in such exhaustive detail, and with such definitive scope and power." I read Alive decades ago--it was assigned reading in high school, and it made an indelible impression. Even decades later, I remembered its details, and how much it moved me, vividly. (